way too complicated, I solve this problem by never disconnecting the bar from the Kite and roll a bar up in with a kite. by doing this the lines are always straight and I don't where out the connections. Waterman

WATERMANnot sponsored

Bularoo Recycle CenterAll things WAVES, I get bored with flat water, ho hum!just keeping my gills wetOnce you come to Browns Point, you'll never come back, but once you get a wave, that is all you think about!

Yes, waterman is the man, just roll up the lines like he did in the video, but don’t disconnect the lines and roll the bar up with the kite. Same way flysurfer kites are done, you never take the bar off. It takes a bit to get a smooth technique when you unwind the bar, that seems to be the key.

Downside is you can't rinse your bar in fresh water to prevent salt/sand from killing the mechanical parts of your bars (pulleys, swivels, release, etc).

I just wrapped up my bar like this a couple days ago. Instead of using bungees like he did at 2:40, I used all the extra line that he had at 3:00 to secure the "T". Looks clean and I was still able to rinse the bar in fresh water at home (a ton of sand always comes off the bar). We'll see if it works next time I get out.

I saw this about a month ago and have been doing it ever since works really well, you just need pay close attention but cuts a lot of time. Wish I had a bar for every kite to leave attached but doubt many of us can afford that.

Cool. My solution to this problem is the line buddy, a repurposed piece of flipflop used to keep your lines organized. Especially useful for my 5 line setup. When I take it off it goes in the pocked on my surf shorts.